M CHATHAM CITIZEN, I PUBLISHED WEEKLY. iT PITTSBOBO, - - N. 0. ft. B. LIMEBERRY. Editor A Preprlitor. The National Farmers Alliance And Industrial Unlon.- ! President llann Page, Brandon, Ta. . ' . ' Vice-President C. Vincent, Indian apolis, Ind. . Secretary-Treasurer TV' P.Bricker, Cogan Station, -Pa. ixctcbebs. J. P. Sossamon, Charlotte, N. C. T Hamlin V. Poore, Bird Island, Jlinn. , F. H. Peirsol, Parkersbarf , W. Ya. 3UTI05AI EXECTTIVE COMMITTEE. ilann Page. Brandon, Va. ; B. A. Boutbworth, Denver, CoL; John Bre nig, W. Va.; A. B. Welch. New York; "W. A. Gardner, Andrew's Settlement, Pa. - JCDICIABT. B. A. Southworth. Denver, Colo. B. W. Beck, Alabama. ; H. D. Davie, Kentucky. ' . ' KOBTH CAB03UXA FABMEBS' STATE AXXX AKCE. President J no. Giabam, Bidgeway, K. C. "Vice-President W. O. . Upchurch, Morrisville, 2. C. -Secretary-Treasurer J. T.B.Hoover, Hillsboro, N. C. State Business Agent T. B.Parker, Hillsboro, N. C. Lecturer Dr. V. N. Seawell, Villa cow, X. C. Assistant Lecturer "W. B. Brick boue ' , 2 . C. Chaplain W- S. Mercer, - , N. C. Door-keeper Geo. T. Lane, Greens boro, N. C. Assistant Door-keeper J as.EVLyon, Dnrham,N. C. Sergeant-at-Arms A. D. K. "Wal lace, Baleigh, N. C: Trustee Business Agency Fund W. A. Graham, Machpelah, C. . EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE JfOKTH CAROLINA. TABilEES STATE ALLIANCE. J. W. Denmark, Chairman, Baleigh, X. C. John Graham, Bidgeway, N. C. W. B. Fleming, Bidgeway, N. C. A. F. Hileman, Concord, N. C. Dr. J. B. Alexander,. Charlotte, K. C. - Thomas, D. Oldham, Teer, N. C. 8TATE AIXIAXCE JCDICIABT COMJIITTEr. Dr. J. E. Person, Pikeville, N. C. W. S. Barnep, Baleigh, N. C. T. I vey, Hillsboro, N. C. CHATHAM COrKTT AIXtAKCE. President W. W. Edwards, Sim mon Grove, K. C. Vice-President B. B. Hargrove, William's Mills, N. C. Sscreretary-Treasury -B. B. Line- berry, Pittsboro, 2. C. - Chaplain A. M. Self, Hadley, N. C. . Lecturer -John W.'Atwater, Bialto, - n. c ' ".assistant Lecturer John P. Dark, St, Lawrence, N. C. Door-keeper J. F.Cook,Beaumont, N. C. ' Assistant Door-keeper J.R. Brown, Pittsboro, N. C." ' ' ; Sergeant-at-Arms G. W. TJoore, , Pittsboro, N. C. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. ! J. T. Paschal, chairman; R. H. Dix on and J. J. Jenkins, Pittsboro, N. C. ' , '. .? ; THE. POPULIST VIEW. Old Solon Chase of Maine declares that the money question i3 now ripe, and will be settled by the people be fore any other Issue Is seriously dealt with. "The free coinage of 'silver," eays Solon Chase, "is not all of the money question by any means, but is as much as the people are ready for. The great conservative multitude don't V. bite off justice in great large junks. The silver question Is the weak spot in the bondholders ramparts, and is the spot where the break must be made. , After free coinage of silver the logic of events will mark out the way."- It takes more than a good temporary price for wheat to restore good times. Next year the goldbugs will have. to go to the arbitrament of the ballot box confronting 40 cent wheat, for with a large wheat acreage and yield the geld standard range of prices will reassert itself with renewed vigor. What will the plutocratic press then find to say to the farmers? In the .meantime - city worklngmen are unable to find the whereabouts of the general prosperity whose presence la cur midst is advertised by the dally Percent is hard to get. Here is an illustration from the Ta coma Sun: "The Ledger yesterday jjave nn account cf a Mr. and Mrs. White who went, from Seattle to Portland in search ct work. Falling to find any they had to tramp back to Seattle. hen it is remembered lhat the Ledger is lb chief prosperity howler in the elate it will be easily understood that it h3 forgotten to lie in this one in stance." And the following from an Eastern lator paper tell3 the same tcry: "Cases cf starvation are becoming so common that they hardly attract at tention any more. The once proud Americans tre linking Into helpless, hcpe!es3 condition that travelers teil is ia Italy, Spain and other despotisms, .lea and rcmen tramp the streets and Highways cf their native land in a ain endeavor to find -some one who will - give them food for thefr labor.. In the ' last week ceverai;gruesome cases ha?e ecme to light that ought Jo. bring the blush of shame to any American. How - long this thing is to be allowed to con tinue i3 a serious question, but 'there !s no dcubt that the public is besoming . restless under it, and that the pent up Crc3 of indignation are gathering force and cannot always be smothered. The people have made enough wealth, but they are not allowed to consume it. It is consumed wasted-by those who in .r,wise aided in its production.. And i he world moves to'; higher planes by apparently contradictory methods." 1 i - - facts WOETH NOTING PUBLIC OR PRIVATE RAILROAD OWNERSHIP. Prlrate Ownership a Tremendous Bar dea Upon the Backs of tb Peopl md th Source of Great Political Corruption, . Ia 1891, according to Prof. Frank Parsons, the people paid the railroads, ta round numbers, $ 1.200,000,000; the tame or better service would have cost them only $540,000,000 less.lhan half if they had owned the reads free rom debt and under good manage- menL During the period of transition ircm private to public ownership, the yearly cost of the railways to the peo ple would, of course, be more than 5040,000,000: Upon the plan of pur chase least favorable to the people, the expenses of running the; roads undtr ood public management together with interests and dividends would be $770, COO.OOO a year, falling towards $540,000, 000, as the stocks and bonds were paid off and interest and dividends ceased; that Is, the savings of the people by public ownership would run from $430,000,000 to $660,000,000 a year, ac cording to th9 plan of purchase adopt ed. This would enable the nation to re duce rates to one-half their present figures and still' realize a profit Even a greater reduction then might be made, lor the lowering of rates would be followed by a rapid Increase of pa tronage that would materially Increase the revenue of the roads. It costs lit tle more to run full trains than trains half full. In this fact lies the possi bility that, under public . ownership, fares. might be reduced in this country in a few years, not merely one-half. but to one-quarter or even one-tenth' or to one-twentieth of the present rates, if the benefits of the increased traffic is given mainly to the passenger rates. In 1SS3 the government road3 of Austro-Hungary reduced fares in many cases to cnc-half and in some case3 to one-sixth of former rates, the average reduction being more than 40 per cent of the whole system, yet the trade In creased somuca that the total receipts wero $432,000 more than the year be fore. i The cost of carrying a passenger in the United States Is set down by the railroads at about 2 cents a mile. This, however, is clearly too high, even un der our clumsy and wasteful system. Dcrsey's "English and American Rail ways" puts the average cst per mile at L14 cents In England and 1.2 cents for the whole United States. The Ger man railways charge, on an average, a shade over a cent. a mile, and they clear over 50 per cent profit cn their passenger service. The London and Northwestern company carried passen gers first-class on trains from London to Manchester and back at -one-half cent a mile and made a profit of .200 per cent on the transaction, showing that the cost was about one-sixth of a cent a mile. Many of our American roads tell &caoon tickets at a little more than one-half a cent a mile. They would. not do thi3 if they did not know that one-half a cent more than covers the cost. The Pennsylvania, Reading and others sell season tickets at seven- tenths of a cent a mile. I am sure, says Prof. Parsons, that these reads never' figure on less than 50 per cant profit on their passenger traflic, even in. their commutation rates. Accord ing to Dorsey, It costs the Pennsylva nla and similar roads about one-half cent to move a passenger one mile, and in well-settled districts the cast 13 much less. 1 In discussing bribery in legislative bodies, the Medical World asks: Who buys legislators? Who buys congress men? Who buys city ccuncilmen? One answer will apply to all these questions. That answer is, powerful corporations. What are these power ful corporations? Chiefly our railroad. express and telegraph companies. It is well known here in Pennsylvania that the legislature cf Pennsylvania is dominated, by the Pennsylvania railroad. Is it not the same to a greater or Ies3 degree in every stte? Do you remember the credit mobilier fraud of the early 70s? It corrupted congress almost through and through. It was a railroad "job." What do the free passes given to legislators and judges and congressmen all over the country mean? We have frequently spoken of the telegraph franks given so freely to congressmen. . But that is only a beginning. Suppose there were a serious danger of legislation affecting the principal telegraph com panies. Their lobby, -with abundant . funds, would soon te on hand In Wash ington, and . every available congress man and senator muiiou - tamed as special counsel, " ard every special ecort, both fa:r and unfair would be made to defeat the proposl tion, however much the people might desire it. The same applies to legis lation concerning express comranle3 Do you not see that the source of corruption" in our politics, perhaps nine-tenths, comes from the sources mentioned? Remove the source and the stream will dry up. Fortunes are not made and lost in the postal service. corruption does not come from the postal service. The postal service serves the citizensLof the country more cheaply, more impartially; and more faithfully than any ether service we have. It has no stocks and bonds to be speculated In on Waii Rtr hf people have the service. Prompt, faith- iu acrvjce ai cost is what we want. ana w e want to put an end to specula tion and corruption. As snerulatfrm corruption and bad public service come "uui. puwic utilities (railroad, tele graph and exDressl befnf nwn. operated by private parties, and cheap an? satisfactory niption nor speculation result from the mail service being owned and operated by the government, is it not a logical conclusion that the best way to get rid cf speculation and corruption and to secure satisfactory and uniform ser vice from the railroads,, telegraph and PreS3 la.tn'nlnrn thorn ulen i.no. government ownership and operation? In a country town, when a man buyi a new suit, people guy him for a weel COINAGE AND BATIO. SCIENCE OP METALLIC MONEY IN BRIEF. . Ik Is Free Coinage That Fixes the trice et Gold as Well as RlUer Closlae; Mints Depredates "Bullion but No the Cola of a Great Country.- Why 16 to 1? Because that Is the ra tio of our present silver and gold cdlns' To increase the ratio would necessi tate the recolnage of our present silver dollars Into a less number of dollars. For instance if the ratio were made 32 to 1 our present four hundred mil lion silver dollars would be recolned Into only two hundred million dollars. If it were proposed to diminish the ratio and make 8 ounces of silver equal in value to one; ounce of gold then our present silver dollars would be coined into twice as many dollars. The money power fight the coinage of silver because It means more money and therefore cheapef dollars of all kinds. They would all the more bit terly fight 8 to 1 because that would mean a much larger increase In money volume than 16 to L Besides their objection to a diminished ratio there may be another objection, 6ays the Missouri World. The United States bonds call for coin of the weight and fineness at the time of their issue. A reduction in the weight of the sliver dollar would probably enable the bond holder to lawfully refuse to take it. It has been claimed that even an In crease in the weight of the silver dol lar would render it a non-legal tender for bond parments. These are the reasons for 16 to 1. There are no other arguments for that ratio now. Formerly when France and some other European na tions coined silver free the ratio here should have been fixed with some re gard to the ratio there. Their ratio was ttVi to 1 and if they should reopen their mints to free coinage at that rate. our mints if reopened at 16 to 1 would get little to do. for at 15 to 1 sliver Is worth $1.32 an ounce, while at 16 to 1 it Is worth only $1.29. The mints of France would pay three cents an ounce more for silver than the United States would. That was the case when the United States and France both had free coinage, hence there were com paratively few silver dollars coined in the United States during that time. When a great government's mints offer a price for a limited article like silver, that price will be substantially the price the world over. But take all mint markets away from gold and sll ver and what their ratio would be no man can tell. Maybe 50 to 1, maybe 2 to 1. The ratio would be changeable. It might be 1 to 1 and later 2 to 1, just like the ratio between corn and wheat. Not long ago corn and wheat sold ia this market at about the sam price per pound the ratio was about 1 to 1, but now it is about 4 to 1 four bushels of corn equal in value to cne bushel of wheat. If there was no mint market then the recent gold dis coveries in. Alaska would make gold cheaper as compared to silver, but with a mint market for gold and none for silver, gold as compared with silver Is getting dearer every day. A year ago gold was worth $20.67 per ounce troy and silver about 70 cents; now after the Klondike discoveries, gold is still worth $20.67. while silver has fallen to 52c. The mints of the United States are "still paying at the rate of $20.67 an ounce for gold, hence the price cannot get below that, whereas silver with no mint market in any great commercial nation, continues to go down, and may go to ten cents an ounce. If all the. mints 6hould cease to buy gold, the boys would come back from Klondike in a hurry, for the uncoined yellow metal would probably not be worth more than fifty cents an ounce, but the coined gold would still be worth $20.67 per ounce. United States coined silver Is still worth $1.29 per ounce, though the uncoined goes at 46 cents an ounce. If the Alaska gold hunters should find the. mountain of gold which some seem to believe ex- isits there, the coinage of gold would be stopped without delay by all the nations now coining gold, but the gold coin would still be worth $20.67. We would see an ounce cf coined gold wrth $20.67 at all time3 and an ounce of uncoined gold worth fifty or sixty cents, with an uncertain and fluctuat Ing market. What AT9 Ton Doing? "What are you doing toward3 Destine yourself on the affairs of your nation? Do you u ie a reform uaner? Do vou read any of the thousands of reform books now published for your enlieht- enment? Are you dead to duty and citizenship? Are you watchlne as well a3 praying for Detter times? Are von cure you cast an Intelligent ballot last. I a 11' Do you. nudoretond fully What the 2,000,000 Populists teach as the remedy Cor our hard times? The peo ole may rule this nation if they are vigilant and capable. If not, good bye, to liberty. You are one of the neonl and one of the partners In preserving our iiDeruea. uai- are you doing to defend the priceless liberty that our forefathers shed their blood to glvecus? The Referendum. POINTS FROM THE PRESS. C Had justice and equality always pre vailed there would now be no nr5- sity to assist the unemployed by chcr- lty. columbu3 Pest. It would be a terrible thing for the government (the people) to own the monopolies, but it Is all right for the monopolies to own the government WTiat do you think about it? o Age. The cjal 6trlke has been precipitated by low wages the wage scale is large ly governed by demand. If prosperity was upon us, instead of running at a deer's pace in advar.es of . us, there would be a demand for coa'l for mills and factories. Evidently- the coal strike, despite Messrs. Hanna and Sherman. 13 the result of the false fi nancial policy of the government. Even the stupidly vicious antagonists of bimetallism will soon open their eyes to a condition which is sinking our. country into greater depths of woe eachday: Grand Junction Sentinel. I Nearly evefy town in the west hta J2Ci-Ieg lawyer who never haa to pay car-fare and can get passes for hi3 family and friends. Why? -Well, yctt i f - t Just make a cote cf It Ton will find'.,, L lt , . - these men taking a deep Interest la He TellsThat Knowledge Of tvery- politics; they pack caucuses and con ventibns; and every Urn find them on f Howler. Should there by ah improvement in business. It will be caused by an In crease cf money, breught over to pay for the surpus products of our country, the very thing our people said would Improve conditions. But the Repub lican editors and politicians claim all the Improvement for -t themselves and their party. And , the worst of it is, their blind dupes believe them. Chi cago Express. ,. j w j ' Last fall the Republican press throughout the land dubbed every free silver advocate a dishonest "repudla tionl3t." Kansas and Nebraska makes the old party liars eat their own words by paying off their own' debts in full with the interest agreed to at a speed that astonishes the . world. As & re sult, the eastern loan companies are running over Teach other, trying to loan to the people of .these two states their money at rates that would sur prise an "honest" money Republican In Indiana, trying to effect a loan on the same security National Democrat Whenever a party or a politician is ready to admit the inability of the peo ple to name their candidates, they ara not far from despotism In some form. -Common Cause. . , The mandate of our people was un questionably to leave things alone, to leave our currency System In statu quo. But we -cannot leave It alone. It is top-heavy and it will not stand - - . . . L 1 A J up. Either the top must oe cut ou or the base broadened. We must .have contraction at the top .or expansion at the bottom. Philadelnhia Amerlcm. Dlck'a 'Dang-Unc Work. Boss Hanha's man.: Dick, may be re lieved of the management of the Han na campaign in Ohio. He has got him self the ill-will of the Republican mag nates for having bungled his work in briblnar certain Ohio Populists. In stead of using cash, he was thoughtless 'enough to have used checks, and these disagreeable proofs of- bribery have trnttpn into the wronsr nand3. Tns magnates aforesaid expected Dick to arrange ior me nommauon ct a straight Populist stale ticket In Ohio, and for other Populist assistants to the Republican state and legislative tickets, especially the latter, but they didn't expect him to do It so clumsily as to be caught at lt. As no explan ation has been or can be put forward by Dick that will satisfy an Intelli gent and unprejudiced mind that he has not been engaged in wholesale bribery, it is believed in Washington that Boss Hanna will seek to escape responsibility for the bribery by pre tending to rebuke Dick by taking the management of the campaign out of his hand3. Dlck'a bribery has greatly strengthened hopes of defeating Hanna, -Ex. Now You're Shouting. A 6hort time since a gold syndicate organ of New York printed a glowing article on the effect that mortgages have been paid off the past eighteen months in the state of Nebraska to the amount of $30,000,000. This fake was taken up by Republican papers all along the line and reproduced for misleading the people. Now the fact Is that not only one twentieth of this sum has been actually paid off In cash. The large majority of the transactions are simply renewals, but many of the mortgages were paid off by the debt ors land being sold on foreclosure to pay the debt. Furthermore, many of these debtors who have been sold out have lost all and are in debt In many cases the lenders foreclosed their mortgages, took the debtor's lands, and still hold frem 50 to 75 per cent of the debts against the people who borrowed Clinton County Demo crat. Some l'eople Don't Understand. Some people do not understand tha the men who favor the free coinage of silver are also just as much in favor of ihe free coinage of gold as they who style themselves exclusively gold men. People prior to 1873 could take elth--r their gold or silver to the U. S. mints ind have lt made Into, dollars. Now hey can take only their gold. - The tonsequence' is that there are fewer dollars being madeT and whenever any cdy wants one he must give more for It than he used to. Men who have Theat, cotton, dry. goods, real estate, 'ator cr anything else must give much mere of them than right to buy a dol '?.x when they want one. To the prop erty of those people who own money this increase In the value of the dollar aracunts to an absolute confiscation. Ex. .. ' i ' The money power cannot hypnotise the people with their tales of a pros perity which the people know reach3 only as far as the bank accounts of the plutocrats. - Another British novelist has teen tt duced into coming over here by the prospect of making a few more Ameri can dollars. This time it is the retlrins and modest author of the "Zenda" stories. Lovers of the romantic have enjoyed the lively work of Mr. Haw kins, but It Is doubtful If they will care at this day to hear lt read by .the au thor. Dickens first set the fashion of authors reading their work to audi ences, and he was followed by Thack eray and many others. Eut both Dick ens and Thackeray were something of public entertainers, the former espe cially so. The breadth and human In terest of his writings, too, helped to make bis readings a success. Ian Mac laren called forth a lively Interest be cause be was, besides being a popular writer, a noted philosopher. Mr. Haw kins Is none of these things. He Is not even a public speaker, and has not yet attempted to test his powers in that di rection. It is hardly likely that be will add to bis popularity by this American trip, although, of course his admirers over here will bo glad to see blm. The discovery of c new and ver? pot aonous moth naturally happened li Massachusetts. That State makei heavy appropriations for killing bugs IP TALKS 10 1 thing is Essentials He ALSO ADVISES OBSERVATION Inform thm Whit Trees Are uest for Uses to Which They Are Tut. 1 Other Good Advice. Here is a letter for the boys. . I believe that even an imperfect knowledge of many callincs renders a I man harpier than perfection m any one ml rnmrnr!ir innrincfl Ol Oil ine I rest Great scientists, inventors seem to be world's progress and kind, but their work is generally expense of their health and happiness. Sir Isaac- Newton in his last days ex claimed with a sigh, "I have made a slave of my sell" His great mind was aIwavm nn a utrairt in one direction. It is said of him that he had a bole cut In the low er part of the door for his favor ite cat to jnter uid exit, and wuen sne had a pair of kitten he had two smaller holes cut lor them, the body. It must . m . nt 7 J i The mind is like have a variety of food. It is like the muscles in the arms or less. If onlv one set are used the others become weak and will gradually peruh away. ediudee. aman of fine iudicial mind and literarv attainments, but who ac knowledged his very limited knowledge of nature and nature's laws. ' I hardly know one tree from another, 6aid be, "excepting, of course, the chestnut, hickorv nut and walnut Yes. of course, I know the cine and the oak. Indeed I have never had any occasion to know more for I was raised in town and books have absorbed me." I was ruminating about this because our little cirl's mother is teaching her to draw and to paint, and I asked her to draw me a chestnut tree, an oak tree and a manle tree. She is working on them now and has to go out and look at them and examine the bark on the trunk, and the shape of the limbs and the leaves. I wonder how many boys and girls can draw a hickory leaf with out looking at one. I should like to see their specimens. Thousands of boys, especially country boys, know all the common trees of their neighborhood but itreauires close and careful obser vation to describe them and point out the difference. Now there are ten dif frent kinds of oaks in this country. but very few town raised people can name half of them. Then there are dif ferent kinds of hickories and pines and ash and elm trees, besides the hack berry, box elder, poplar, beech, locust and oottonwood. Eueene Le Hardy was a very learned and scientific Frenchman, but thought that American cotton grew on the cottonwcod trees and that we gathered it by us ins lad ders. It is said that a Mr. Jackson, of Atlenta, is trying to introduce the lat ter kind now and has got the trees up to fourteen feet hizh. The study of the .trees and shrubs of this southern country is a delightful and instructive recreation for young people, and I wish they would ray more attention to it. Of course this study requires some knowledge of bot any, but that is easily, acquired. This kiDd of knowledge is more useful and more comforting than a college smat tering of calculus and conio sections and rhetoric and logic I do not be ueve thero are ten men in Bartow county who would know ginseng if they were to see it. Isot many more know what is father graybeard or white ash, the medicinal shrub from which old A. Q. Simmons first made the original Simmons liver medicine in Gwinnett county. I know about that, for when I was a young merchant I sold the first he ever made and continued to 6ell it for him for several years and he told me what it was made of. I think. though, thnt the father graybeard gave out about the time the old man died. I wish that our young people would acquire habits of observing things more closely as they journey along through life. Some people see everything and some see nothing hardly. W hen should trees be cut down that are wanted for wood? What kind of wood is the strongest and will bear the greatest burden? What kind is the most elastic? What kind the hardest to split? What kitid will last the longest in the ground? What kind most suitable for pianos, chairs, furniture or wainscoting? What kind for mauls or wedges or canes? Dr. Oliver Holmes must have studied all about these when he wrote the "One HossShay." "80 the deacon inquired of the village folk Where he could flod the strongest oak That couldn't be eplit nor bent nor broke; That was for spoken and flocr and fill?; He sent for lance wood to make the t bills: The crossbars wero ash from rtraightest tree?; The tnela were cheese. white wood that cuts like And nubs of elm." logs from the settler's But perhaps Dr. Holmes got it all from some old honest wagon maker, for they know. 111 bet that Mr. Brad ley, of our town, can answer every question. The boys ought to find out that black locust and chestnut and osage orange make the best posts, and black cum the best hubs, and persim mon the best wedges or gluts, and sas safras the best bows, and white oak tho best baskets. In Enkland it is claimed that a yew tree post rill last longer than an iron one. The boys ought to know that the barks of all trees are nonconductors of heat and cold and keep them cool in summer and warm in winter, and the green leaves are the lungs that inhale the car bon from the air and not olr make wood for the tree, but purify the at mosphere that we breathe. And hence every habitation ought to have aome trees abont it. The boy ought to' know about those beautiful inlands in the sea that are of coral formation and kept growing until they got above the water and then come co roanuts came float in 1? along and lodged there ai.d sprouted and gTew and the leaves of tho trees fell down and rotted and made a soil for more coco an ut a, and in course of time the island became a paradise. That is the testimony of the rocks. The boyt rhould watch the little gassomer ball that floats awar in the air from the sweet little dandelion plant 80 light and ao feathery that it would take a thousand of them to weigh an ounce and yet the seed are there for more plants and they are wrapped, as it were, in a blanket to protect them from the win teT'e cold.- So it is with' the seed of the Scotch thistle that is blown about by ft breath of air like it .was nothing, but it has the germ, the embryo of life in it, and will find a lodtring place somewhere and sleep until sprincr. and then, make no mis take. It-will net come ur a dandelion, bat will surely make a thistle. In the horticultural gardens at "London axe MS - raspberry piuv---- omh who Found in a raa2 "omBtl been buried , wj vn CQ lonffi - bovs )V' a l-iAr men. Tindontwby i u.it.. .mi Tiftomer utu- . - i Ui, that". 34jW.Vig-SU: live one ana ?y in the ' buzrard can " a""vlt I Z nor .ir Above vou and never bat a wid0 sail rounu , re a feather - v. . Ren 2H ."Jl w"h" .bm. Franklin I ri man. " c 0 uyj Of r..t man I -txie rri. yotingesi rntPen children. - apprenticed to print- candle maier. ex - . s. m Phila er: ran away uum - , de Phia wheseventeen rear, old and tii . Mr. Read. and. fell in love -av f mm I5Q5VUU w Will Ju C lAl UU e. - 1 read and studied in every leisure with Deborah, his .aauguier, Italian, moment: mastered xtcutu, Spanish and Latin; became postmaster Society and th.yraiiw nine down from heaven with a kite ana astrinsandakey. . . . , van in. uuu kj n ---- What a man he wasi .wua uujr U1U ATP in awuivv"iivv . mTT cnilf(T T H K OADDAIH OU11UUU INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR OCTOBER 17. . teon Tett "Fui Before the Eonin CoernorV AeU mIt., 10-25 Golden Text! XtelAli all. 10--Coimentry on f. lenoU by Iter. D. M Ptenrni. ' a ... I w. i 1 T7nll the governor, and is permitted to e peak for nimseii ia uv preseaco vi avvuacii-, io high priest and others who have come from Jerusalem to condemn him (verae 1); Tay accused him of many things, but ail tueir accusations were falo verse 5-3). and thus he hud Increased fellowship with his Lord in that they spoke raischieTOus things of mm, imagined deceits nna lata 10 nis charge things he knew not of (Vs. xzxvlit.. 12; ixlx, 4). Ail manner or lenowsaip wna Ood and with Christ should be prized by us asa gift as much as to believe on Ilim (Phil. 1., 29). 11-13. Taul with few words sweeps away all their accusations as utterly untrue and without foundation. He knew that GOi. was with him, and he had no fear. He could calmly face all his accusers, and the devil himself, their captain. He knew in his soul that there were more with him than with them (II Kings vl.. IS) and could say: "Tbonghmysoul Is among Hons, men whose teeth are spears and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword, be Thou exalted, O God. Mv heart is fixed. I will siag and lTe praise" (Ps. Ml., 1-7V 14. Her he begins to state the real cause Of their anger against hJie. Ho believel all things written in the law and In the Erophets, and that made him a very trou lesome fellow to these religious people, who did not believe Ood. A minister ia Chicago said the other day that these peo ple calling themselves Bible students were Tery troublesome, and certainly they must be to such ministers as prefer their own ease, with lots of cricket and" lawn tennis and hunting and Ashing, rather than Bible study and real wore for God. 15. "There shall be a resurrection of the dead both of the jast and of the unjust." This was and is even to this day a trouble some dwtrlao-. to many, though plainly taught even ia the cherubim story of Gen. III... and very clearly et forth In Dan. xii 1-3. Not that Just and unjust shall rise at the same time, for Ber. xx.. 5. 6. says that a thousand years Shall intervene, and to this thero Is no contradiction in all Scrip ture, for the hour of John v., 23, will cover the thousand years as easily as the hoar of John v.. 25, has already covered over 1800 years. Our Lord Jesus made a very eTi dent distinction between the two resurrec tlons when He told a certain one of rewards at the resurrection of the just (Luke xir., ii). 16. The blessed hope of the return of Christ, tha resurrection ct the righteous ana tnetr rewards tor service at ills com ing for His saints 1$ that which purifies us from the defllementi and the entanglements 01 tuts present evil world and makes us la bortobe ever acceptable to Him. Every believer is accepted in Him. (Eph, 1., 6), and that stands unchanged, but because of this we seek to be acceptable to Him in all things, and trust Him to work in us those things which are well pleasing in His sight (iieo. xin., 17-13. Here is a true and orlef statement -of the case as to why he was in Jerusalem and wny in the temple when they found mm there, and who his accusers ought to have been. If any. The secret of the whole trouble was "that which Paul well under stood, for he himself was once heartily one witn me nign priest ana eiaerj in their hatred of Jesus and tho story of His resur rection from the dead. It Jesus of Xaza reth was really Israel's Messiah, then the Nation was guilty of crucifying their King-, and that they would not submit to. Paul had actually seen Him, and knew that It was even so, and that the crucified Christ was really risen from the dead and was at the right hand of God, Israel's true and only Messiah, Son of. David, Son of Abra- naru. 20, 21. "Touching the resurrection of the dead I am called in question by you this day." It was that which set the council id an uproar (xxiii., , 7), and they knew it. It was the resurrection from the dead which with power declared Him to be the8on of God (Bom. t., 4). and the full import of the great ract 11 nnely set forth in I Cor. xv. I here is no gospel, no salvation, no forzive ness of sins, no use In preaching, no ground ior hud, no sense in Daptism or any ordi nance of the church if Christ be not risen. ills life and death were all In vain if He be not risen. Bat He is risen, and that secures everything for all who are His or are will ing to become His bv faith in Him. . evmeauy saw more cieany into the whole business than the high priest and Mat-s wUhnrl that rv.V, .n4K 22. Felix evidently saw more clearly into elders wished that he might, and the man who could now srive the most imoortant testimony, next In order, was the chief cap- tain who tad t-riv rAnA Mm frm infuriate! Jews." There was. therefore. nothing further to be 1 done till Lvsias should ccone. The waiting times tor the people pi God when the work seems hin dered by the indifference or ODen oddoiI- tion of the enemies of Ood is one of the mysteries, it would seem from verse 27 that Paul was a prisoner at Ca?sarea for two years. Mlcht all this hare ben utul if be had not insisted upon going to Jeru- iem jusi ai inai time? Anyway, to rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him is J. raui is a kind of free- prisoner. He la under guard, but at liberty to see all who come to him. So Jt was also on the way loisomeand at Home (xxTii.,S; xxviil., 16;, and Taui doubtlosa made the bett pos sible USe Of his liberty fof the frrr f ClrA and to magnify the Lord Jesus, for that was the whole aim of him llf nH th. nA of all bin teaching (GalMU 20; Phil. L, 20. eiea one as. Can l tav trnl xerme to live is Christ t' "I lire vet not I. but Christ 11 veth In mV? -Christ shaU K 1. . 1 .. u-... !4. Hnw trA T.1 v. .vi- - .- a u u . n auiu i in f 1 1 in i nn. and especlallr to a Jwm fnrnn. Af ki. mottoea was. "To the Jew flrf fvtnm 1 16). He did not need time ta thinV Ant rr prepare his discourse, for he was full of it. --"--. v. ,uiiB., uu aiways ready ior !Sni.?L0pp?r?.,ID-lty- ETerT Treacher S ?rLTi?ttpanoitTJ0.,Ieak u horded hL,U fnl?,? I'i9 Pt."l 25. "He reasoned of righteouineis tern peranee and judgment to come." TVe mav imagine without difflculty, from his epis- tlK. rT What ll. V a I whence he would get his argument. He tlW15VeOIied out of the Scriptures (Aets 7. ?'.Ani ?T!.I words which w tmab, jaucs lie wnnm v-o 1 am . T"" " iracjein (i cor., ii., 4). On SifJLt???.116 WOQ,l crtliJy show its . . """ cenainiy snow Its SrMtJlftbKttn?Jn,l,ha5 11 nor can-get it XnlV&J?1" G baa provided it iQ"y aPiff -5 fr.yTo 'whoso A man Is known by the company he "cri? autt a womaa hj her relatives. - vt eama iroia . POPULAR SCIENCE. VeV Fsm 41 a e M minutes. audi- lSrt tJi Tr-f. n trnrn . , t water cases irom Horde, Germany, engines, which will drive ZIZJ , ,f a n "'Ji to? ight and power. If all the coal fields cn the, were burning at once in a vast firM? heat emitted could not be comca.',,? that of the sun for even a .SSSj K By thermo-electric methods Pr man, Lawrence and Barr have f on i that copper melts at 1095 centime, silver at 970 platinum at hoj degree?, tul w nam at C60 decrees. A man weighing two hundred would weigh nearly three toas o Btin, and his own weight would ro tha earth.- 1 n. . . . 1 nat tne etnsr is a very atteamM form of matter as 13 generally u uevea, .is aeniea uy rroiessor rw1 1 Dear, avians ma w eu-Knoxra tn ; ei lies ui mauw, ia uunmnea in o. tity and.homogeneous, doe not abs.YrC t l : . i . i t . 13 UCJ.l " "Ub " 01 eaerrr. and receives wave vibrations aai la - V 'il i 1 livers them without loss. About 4203 plants are nowcollecte In Europe for commercial Tmrrn 42C of them being sought for their iumet Auere ore gathered 112( species of white flower?, 951 of yel. low, 823 ol red, 594 of blue, and 30j of violet; and 187 of the tvhite Coven have pleasing od6rs, 77 of theyelloT' 84 of the red, 3i of tne blue aail3e the violet. An" interesting if not sisraifid-i' coincidence has been pointed oatta Mr. A. Gosling, British Minister ia Central America. Tho volcano of Izalco, in the. Bepublio of Sahaiot nas oeen in acuve eruption ior overt century, but suddenly ceased to be u near the middle of last December: This was followed on December 17 bj the very unusual occurrence of serenl earthquake shocks in England. A report of tho forest conservator of West Australia shows that timber ii abundant. Nearly all Australia woods, however, are more remarkibli for durability than ease of working, the kauri pine of New Zealand beitj the only wood of Australasia compara ble with the pine and nr timber o Europe and JSorth America. The principal South Australian timber it the jarrah, of which the colony fcu about 8,000-OOD acres. A magnified phonograph record r exhibited by Professor rKendrick during a recsnt address to the Edia burgh Royal Society. The vibratioa occurring m half a second were tpreii over a length of twenty feet, and showed that every word 13 a collectioa of musical or other Eounds-running rapidly into each other, theraosiol sounds of the vowels preaominafctg.' 'Constantinople shows seven haa dred to nine hundred'vibrations. Kft word can be read from the curTes, 14I two .tracings of the same word vcall rarely, if ever, be alike. Teterhof. Telei-hof, where the Emperor ail Empress of Russia are to receive the German Emperor and Empress, ui also President Taure, has been t! favorite summer residence of tie iny perial court ever since the reign il Peter the Great. The vast pane built of granite and marble, paintti in red and white, with a gorgeous iron roof and many gilded domes, stana on ar cliff overlookiug the Galf of Fa- land. The rooms are. samptuowj decorated and furnished ia the itji of the last century, and the palace 11 crammed with pictures,tapestryfchiM, malachite, bibeloterie, and curio c all kinds, including many historic' relics. . The red room contains nearly 400 portraits of beautiful women all parts of Eussia, this coiiesioa having been made by Count hon for Catherine II. 1 The gardens are the great featari at Peterhof with terraces siopwa nway to the sea, ana every cuuw - ble description of fountains, oww temples, columns, Palladian bridges, and toy mills. The "Samson" Ion tain represents him opening we wy frnm wbirb pcouts a jet ttV'J ninety feet in height. There ar ca nals and waterfalls without end, in cluding the golden cascade, ' flows down an immense flight of iteji which are richly gilded. There are magnificent views from the terracj outside the palace, commanding M f!ronta1t and fit. Petersburg. I" park, which is well wooded, .coattfj large number 01 imperi I 7 . . ,r i " TlerifiiUHi tages," including Marly, I . Ol-. . T.1.. tV,a Farm. T I the Btraw Palace, the Farm, I u: - r..ni..M'. ,! Alexander, ;rVo fV'f retreat of & which is the favorite retreat w bigon, present Czar, from which there v lovely rrostect over the south oi x land. London World Bolivia Bids For ImrnlrM"' iv, a PfciittdelDhia . t -ji i-r : Utest n trip a to BOW 7 inducements to immigrant, i 1 - ivin from it special reierence xo iuu United States. It seems to fffZji opportunities for men of ability enterprise, and, as the country ijJJ and its development still in its tafgV there is room for, perhaps, the . 01 - me surplus popuin . . j - il. 1 nn WUlCi T: . 11 so oimcuit to maxe a - conntrr. lint the unueu o- I v i -ix t rUs t J" 1X3 tttrf7 to "d T'l 1 . . ITT- rT I 1 I r l M T i u nn Km 1 1 ! I .ii . - WJV grate, are tne very oueo 7- neeaea at nome, wjmt jj no mind to go where they mas'- for a living. Still, if men mo-. der, it is better for them ta mild climate like that of Boh to brave the rigors of the Arctiertf - I Ia earch of gold- Binderpesfbeing a cattle Dr. Koch has found out . not atUck birds. He tried to ( late hens, pigeons, guinea w I jko"--- " -,rr vur crane, an eagle and a f.cretI7bBt i1 with the bacillus of the disease, W with the bacillus of the oi. did not affect them. He ijbbitf unsuccessful with dogs, mice. and guinea pigs, but it is not ia tfl the disease - may not oe . catUe bj any of theee aniaafl.